EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW GAMING ACX 3.0

EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW GAMING ACX 3.0 (08G-P4-6286)

It’s been a couple of weeks since the release of Nvidia’s Founders Edition GTX 1080 and we’ve eagerly been waiting for the custom cards to hit the bench. Luckily the first one to hit our bench is the EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW GAMING ACX 3.0. Completely packed with geeky goodness the EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW GAMING ACX 3.0 is pushing a Pascal GP104 core running a base clock of 1721MHz and boost clock of 1860MHz. Thanks to the shrink from the 28nm process to the to the 16nm FinFET process Nvidia fielded a more efficient massively powerful GPU. How much more powerful you ask? Nvdia stuffed 7.2 billion transistors on a 314mm2 die for GTX 1080 on the Pascal GP 104 core. Looking back at what seems to be yesterday they stuffed 5.2 billion on a die 398mm2 for GTX 980. Doing a little spitball math that’s 2 billion more on a 84mm2 smaller die. EVGA took the GTX 1080 design and put it on steroids on it using two 8 pin power connectors and ACX 3.0 cooling. That wasn’t enough they had to double the phase power of the reference design and pop the FTW edition on the shelf with 10 power phases. The think tank was on double duty and the 1080 FTW runs a dual BIOS system and to up the bling factor put the card out with a semi industrial look backed with adjustable RGB lighting.

Lets talk geek for a bit. To reiterate the EVGA GTX 1080 FTW packs a 314mm² Die with 7.2 billion transistors on the Pascal core dubbed GP104 but how is that hardware deck stacked? The GP104 core on the EVGA GTX 1080 FTW is actually a GP104-A1 core variant with 2560 Stream Processors or single precision Cuda Cores and currently the worlds fastest consumer GPU design. (circa June 2016). The card has 160 texture units and 64 ROPS all on an un-compromised core with nothing snipped or clipped the GP 104-A1 core is fully enabled. The EVGA GTX 1080 FTW uses an unprecedented 8GB of GDDR5X from Micron and snubbed it’s nose at the fledgling HBM features on last generation AMD Video Cards. The GDDR5X memory looks to be a much higher clocked version of GDDR5 and runs at a mind-boggling effective 10000MHz. The memory is pushed through a 256-bit memory interface and reaches a sky-high 320GB/s bandwidth.

That isn’t a compete picture of GTX 1080 but it gives you a good idea of the hardware packed on the EVGA GTX 1080 but we still don’t know how that deck is stacked. This isn’t a reference design review, of which there are plenty to boggle the mind, so we’ll keep it short and sweet on stacking the deck. There are 128 Cuda Cores per SM, 7.2 billion transistors on a 16nm FinFet process die, 160 texture units, 64 ROPs, 2MB L2 cache, with a 256-bit memory bus pushing 8GB of GDDR5X at an effective clock of 10000MHz.

So what does all that add up to? A peck and a passel tossed on top of a ton of geeky goodness fit to cross the eyes of the hardest core geek on the planet. It’s enough to make a grown geeks knees weak and make him rush to a wedding chapel with the EVGA GTX 1080 FTW 8G GDDR5X. Will you Geek take this EVGA GTX 1080 FTW to be your lawfully installed Video Card…..

Why all the commotion? The EVGA GTX 1080 FTW and indeed all GTX 1080 will beat the Titan X’s performance at a much lower cost. So now you can have your dream Titan X performance at a fraction of the cost. Beware that variants will emerge and a Titan XI is likely on the horizon, but that horizon is probably to expensive for most of us. You won’t have buyers remorse with an EVGA GTX 1080 FTW, it rocks games and is packed with technology it will take game developers years to master.

GPU Comparison Table

GPU

EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW

Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080 8GB

Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan X 12GB

Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 Ti 6GB

Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 4GB

Architecture

Pascal

Pascal

Maxwell

Maxwell

Maxwell

Codename

GP104

GP104

GM200

GM200

GM204

Base Clock

1721MHz

1,607MHz

1,000MHz

1,000MHz

1,126MHz

Boost Clock

1860MHz

1,733MHz

1,075MHz

1,075MHz

1,216MHz

Stream Processors

2560

2,560

3,072

2,816

2,048

Layout

4 GPCs, 20 SMs

4 GPCs, 20 SMs

6 GPCs, 24 SMMs

6 GPCs, 22 SMMs

4 GPCs, 16 SMMs

Rasterisers

4

4

6

6

4

Tesselation Units

20

20

24

22

16

Texture Units

160

160

192

176

128

ROPs

64

64

96

96

64

FP64 Performance

1/32 FP32

1/32 FP32

1/32 FP32

1/32 FP32

1/32 FP32

Transistors

7.2 Billion

7.2 billion

8 billion

8 billion

5.2 billion

Die Size

314mm2

314mm2

601mm2

601mm2

398mm2

Process

16nm

16nm

28nm

28nm

28nm

Memory

Amount

8GB GDDR5X

8GB GDDR5X

12GB GDDR5

6GB GDDR5

4GB GDDR5

Frequency

1.25GHz (10GHz effective)

1.25GHz (10GHz effective)

1.75GHz (7GHz effective)

1.75GHz (7GHz effective)

1.75GHz (7GHz effective)

Interface

256-bit

256-bit

384-bit

384-bit

256-bit

Bandwidth

320GB/sec

320GB/sec

336GB/sec

336GB/sec

224GB/sec

Card Specifications

Power Connectors

2 x 8-pin

1 x 8-pin

1 x 6-pin, 1 x 8-pin

1 x 6-pin, 1 x 8-pin

2 x 6-pin

Stock Card Length

267mm

267mm

267mm

267mm

267mm

TDP

215W

180W

250W

250W

165W

Pascal is getting a major Core speed bump over Maxwell and by major we mean 5, 6, or 700 MHz more core speed and the top end 1080 gets 8GB GDDR5X running at an effective clock of 10GHz where Maxwell pushes 7GHz on its GDDR5. Each 8 pin power connector pushes 150 W and the PCI-E slot pushes 75 W (for Video Cards, other cards pull 25 W) so EVGA is opening up the voltage to the 10 phase power giving the possibility of 375 W and while the TDP on the 1080 FTW is 215W one connector and the PCI-E slot would put it at 225W dangerously close to the 215W TDP. There may be other reasons like feeding the 10 phase power well-regulated unstressed power or just overkill but we like overkill. Overkill is highly underrated.

Now lets talk Die Size. The Maxwells (not including the Titan and Ti variants) got a die size of 398mm² while Pascal gets 314mm² and packs 7.2 billion transistors on that small die while Maxwell pushed 5.2 billion on it’s larger die. Size does matter a lot in the manufacturing process, now more dies can be cut from each wafer reducing manufacturing costs. According to Nvidia the GeForce GTX 1080 packs more punch than the Titan 10 which had a massive die size of 601mm² so we are in effect looking at more than an evolution more like an evolutionary explosion.

lol bad caps, exploding VRMs, having to do modification to your card yourself, i think this article should not just be reevaluated, it should be removed and replaced something that resembles the truth!

skarsi, you dont have to do it yourself. If you tell them you don’t want to do it yourself, they will send you a new one already done, and when you get the new one, just send them the old one back. I did mine, because I wanted to see the inner workings and take it apart. If I broke it, they would still send me a new one, per their c.s.r. They took responsibility for what their cards were doing, and get an A++++ from me. Where else can you go where they tell you that yeah it’s under warranty, if you want to take it apart and fix it yourself, we will send you all the supplies, but dont worry, if you mess it up, we will send you a new modded card?

Review Overview

EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW GAMING ACX 3.0 (08G-P4-6286) It's been a couple of weeks since the release of Nvidia's Founders Edition GTX 1080 and we've eagerly been waiting for the custom cards to hit the bench. Luckily the first one to hit our bench is the EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW GAMING ACX 3.0. Completely packed with geeky goodness the EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW GAMING ACX 3.0 is pushing a Pascal GP104 core running a base clock of 1721MHz and boost clock of 1860MHz. Thanks to the shrink from the 28nm process to the to the 16nm FinFET process Nvidia fielded…

EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW GAMING ACX 3.0

EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 FTW GAMING ACX 3.0

2016-06-27

Mark Taliaferro

EVGA GTX 1080 FTW Gaming ACX 3.0

Value - 9.8

Performance - 9.8

Innovation - 10

Quality - 9.8

99

9.9

The EVGA GTX 1080 FTW Gaming ACX 3.0 is highly over engineered, heavy overkill, and Geekalicious. We love the engineering and the overkill. Overkill is highly underrated and the EVGA GTX 1080 FTW delivers that overkill in a slap you silly manner.